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Deep Blue, what happened to the computer that defeated the human being?

This computer was able to beat Kasparov himself during a game of chess 26 years ago. Although, after achieving such a feat, it ended up being split up and sent to two different museums.

Where is Deep Blue?

The computer, which was named Deep Blue, is currently in storage at the National Museum of American History, administered by the Smithsonian Institution in Washington. Alongside it, there are some well-known gadgets that have had a major impact on the world of modern technology.

Examples include the Apple I, which was designed by Steve Wozniak in 1975; a floppy disk, which is now virtually impossible to see, let alone use; and the Cray-2 supercomputer, which was considered the fastest computer on the planet between 1985 and 1990.

Deep Blue continues to gather dust after defeating a human during a game of chess 26 years ago, but no one seems to care that something so important is no longer remembered for what it is.

What is more, one of these two towers, manufactured by IBM in 1996, is currently off display after having been part of it for several years. It was in 2002 that it was decided to retire it and remove it from the museum’s collection called “Information Age: People, Information and Technology”.

The other tower is still on display at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, California. Unfortunately, the site is not one of the most popular with tourists.

Deep Blue is slowly being forgotten, even though the Smithsonian also exhibited separately the Logitech mouse used to operate such a technological breakthrough.

What happened to Deep Blue after it defeated the human being?

This supercomputer defeated the famous chess player, Garry Kasparov, during the second duel of the game. Although, what happened after that is not at all pretty. 

Kasparov himself complained that Deep Blue had not been at all autonomous during the duels and had been more intelligent and creative than necessary. Moreover, he was certain that other players had assisted the machine and asked to see the machine’s records to verify this, but IBM refused.

The company would later make these records public, but to no avail, as a host of naysayers appeared and prevented the machine from having any more success than it did.

Because of this group of people who claimed that it was all fake and that someone was controlling the machine, Deep Blue never had the opportunity to play against Kasparov. That is him or any other player who was willing to live the experience of playing against such artificial intelligence.

But beyond this computer, machines have always had this dispute with human beings. An example of this can be found in slot machines. These have a wheel device that, although the die is cast, competes against the human being. Nowadays, the same is true of online slot machines. Although they are on a screen and do not have an internal wheel, the method of play is the same. Moreover, playing online has a lot more benefits. For example, there are different free spins casino bonuses that must be used wisely to get free spins. There is a wide variety of free spin deposit bonuses, which is the most common amongst players. There are also free spins and no deposit bonus, which is the most popular because you do not have to deposit any money. If your goal is to beat the machine in any way, you can always play the free games.

The end of Deep Blue

Although IBM’s stock rose by as much as 20% after the game, Deep Blue had to be dismantled and was shelved until 2002, when it was split between the two museums.

In 1998, the company announced that this supercomputer would be tasked with helping the US government control its nuclear arsenal. Although, nothing more has been heard about it.

Some years later, Feng-hsiung Hsu, one of the architects who worked on the development of Deep Blue, revealed in his book “Behind Deep Blue” that IBM granted him permission to re-develop a completely new version of the computer. 

Kasparov during those years was already on the verge of retirement, so he became disinterested in reliving the experience again. The project remained like Deep Blue itself: archived and in a drawer gathering dust.

The question everyone has been asking ever since is the same: when will a technology capable of taking on and beating the world’s best at any game of chance ever be created again?

Many hope that day will come soon, but in the meantime we can only remember Deep Blue and its victory over Garry Kasparov.

 

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